Okay. Good.
As I see it, the Federal Accountability Act may succeed—we'll find out—in resolving the 70-year-long debate that has gone on in public administration in this country between centralized control of financial accounting and decentralized control that allows the departments to run their own affairs, in that it makes the deputy minister the chief accounting officer, but it also empowers the Comptroller General, underneath the Treasury Board president, at the same time. This, I think, is the first time we've seen both of those things: departmental responsibility increased, along with central control being increased.
Do you think we may finally have resolved the debate that goes right back to the 1930s, when Prime Minister Bennett had to take over the Treasury Board and the finance department and all of those functions himself in order to centralize, and ever since there's been a pendulum swinging back and forth? Do you think we may have finally solved that seven-decade-long debate?